Writing, authors, interviews, writing tips, and writing prompts from the West Coast of the USA.
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
Feb 15 Alphabetaphilia: O is for Otter, words and sentence go here.
Hi friends of reading and writing,
Today, Feb 15, Alphabetaphilia visits an otter in Oregon in honor of O-words and a sentence using five of them. Post in comments and read what others have chosen to increase your word power.
The ornery filly defied the obstetrical efforts, kicked over the orrery, disrupted the monks saying "om," and reared up in an attempt to break out the oriel window.
There is a familiar story about an owl and a pussycat, but this story is about the owl and the octopus, both octogenarians and ornery, often heard using their oral skills in the inky darkness they enjoyed.
onery, obdurate, onion, omette, oatmeal,
ReplyDeleteThe onery urchin was obdurate: he would not eat the onion omelette, preferring oatmeal instead - his oft-requested favorite.
otter, obsidian, otherwise, ondine, orange
ReplyDeleteThe otter posed on the obsidian deck eating an orange sea urchin but otherwise looking like a fuzzy ondine.
Bismarck
om, ornery, obstetrical, oriel, orrery
ReplyDeleteThe ornery filly defied the obstetrical efforts, kicked over the orrery, disrupted the monks saying "om," and reared up in an attempt to break out the oriel window.
oaf, occasional, operatic, open, obdurate
ReplyDeleteThe obdurate oak would open his mouth in occasional operatic raptures, much to the disgust of the other boys in the class.
Richard
oceans, of, one, opening, orchestrated, otters, our, out
ReplyDeleteOne of our otters orchestrated opening out oceans.
oceans, of, one, opening, orchestrated, otters, our, out
ReplyDeleteOne of our otters orchestrated opening out oceans.
Opera, oboe, often, ostinato, over . . .
ReplyDeleteDuring the opera, the oboe was often heard repeating the same ostinato phrase, over and over.
ornery,owl, octopus,oral, octogenarians,
ReplyDeleteThere is a familiar story about an owl and a pussycat, but this story is about the owl and the octopus, both octogenarians and ornery, often heard using their oral skills in the inky darkness they enjoyed.